http://www.helenair.com/articles/2006/04/30/national/a03043006_03.txt
<http://www.helenair.com/articles/2006/04/30/national/a03043006_03.txt>


The rift widens: Muslims are quick to condemn al Qaeda  By ALFRED de
MONTESQUIOU - Associated Press Writer - 04/30/06
CAIRO, Egypt — When terrorists blew themselves up in Egypt's
Sinai Peninsula this week, the radical Palestinian group Hamas quickly
joined Arab governments and Western leaders in condemning a
"criminal attack against all human values."

Egypt's banned Muslim Brotherhood called the bombings
"aggression on human souls created by God."

The denunciations were unexpectedly harsh from the Islamic
fundamentalist groups — Hamas has killed hundreds of Israeli
civilians in suicide bombings, and the Brotherhood is determined to
impose an Islamic government — but experts agree that radical Muslim
organizations want to distance themselves from al-Qaida.

The widening rift largely has not been acknowledged among Western
powers, who tend to lump Islamic radicals together. The U.S. list of
"Foreign Terrorist Organizations," for example, puts al-Qaida
with Hamas and the Lebanese-based Hezbollah.

Scholars of Islamic movements and some Western policy-makers, however,
say distinctions now must be made between hard-line Islamist
organizations and "holy warrior" groups such as Osama bin
Laden's terror network.

"There is a fundamental difference between Islamic groups: Most are
sociopolitical reformists, others are religious extremists," said
Dia'a Rashwan, an Egyptian expert on radical groups.



Hamas and Hezbollah, for example, have national agendas, he said.

They want to reorganize society according to Sharia, or Islamic law.

Extremist religious movements such as al-Qaida are international
revolutionaries who excoriate not only non-Muslims but also Muslims who
fail to follow their views.

Theirs is a holy war to spread their views among Muslims and to repel
any "infidel invasion" of Islamic lands.

"Branding these two branches of radicalism the same way, as
terrorist organizations, reflects a complete misunderstanding of the
issue," he said.

Rashwan said the confusion was a "fatal mistake" of the Bush
administration in its war on terror.

He said that to fight an enemy, one had to define it correctly:
"America doesn't, and this is why it is losing the war on
terrorism."

U.S. policy makers and the State Department did not respond to requests
by The Associated Press for comment.

Leaders from both branches of radical Islam frequently join in a call to
destroy Israel and form an Islamic superstate of all Muslim countries.

But the similarities are mostly rhetorical, said Jon Alterman, director
of the Middle East program at the Center for Strategic and International
Studies, a Washington-based think tank.

"The rift is widening, partly because most governments have become
more open to engaging in a dialogue with hard-line Islamic voices if
they give up violence," he said in a telephone interview.

And in most Muslim countries, he said, the population has been more
willing to engage with national radicals than with "millennial"
movements that view Israel and the West as apocalyptic enemies. In
Lebanon, for example, al-Qaida-style groups had little support, but
Hezbollah became the leading political force among Shiite Muslims, he
said.

By cracking down on al-Qaida but allowing more freedom to political
groups like the Muslim Brotherhood — a rising force in Egypt with
more than 80 lawmakers in Parliament — Arab states were in effect
"creating more daylight" between revolutionary and reformist
radicals, he said.

"Realistically, part of the U.S. policy is influenced by the
attitude of host countries," Alterman said.

Washington is more willing to engage with a group if local authorities
already have, like in Morocco, where the national government opened
talks with the Justice and Development Party but rejected other
hard-line groups. The United States has largely followed the same line,
he said.

The current halt in attacks by the likes of Hamas, which won Palestinian
legislative elections and formed a new government last month, however,
left a vacuum that is being filled by other radical groups, such as
Islamic Jihad, a competing Palestinian group. It has claimed
responsibility for eight suicide attacks against Israel since a
cease-fire declaration last year.

Israeli media also have reported mounting signs that al-Qaida had
designs on the Jewish state as a next battleground. Israeli officials
said recently that Palestinians have established contacts with followers
of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the leader of al-Qaida in Iraq. The officials
also said al-Zarqawi had established footholds in neighboring countries
— Syria, Lebanon, Egypt and Jordan.

Yet many Mideast watchers see a political motive.

"Quite a few observers believe Israel tends to overstate al-Qaida
links to Palestinian terrorism because they want to be seen as equal
victims of a global movement against the West," said Jeremy Binnie
of Jane's Terrorism and Insurgency Center in London.

On the other hand, nationalist groups do not want to see their more
militant members joining the international jihadists, said Hugh Roberts,
Egypt director of the International Crisis Group think tank.

"Palestinian groups are already highly organized and well-rooted
organizations. They are very well placed to prevent al-Qaida from
getting a solid foothold," Roberts said.

Al-Qaida's murky structure also is misleading, experts say.

Some attacks first blamed on al-Qaida, such as the March 2004 train
bombings in Madrid, have since been linked to local groups with only
nominal links to bin Laden's umbrella terror network.

Still, the recent blasts in Egypt show that al-Qaida-type influences
continue to spread in the Muslim world.

Though Egyptian authorities blamed last week's five bombings —
three on a Sinai resort and two targeting international peacekeepers and
police — on semi-nomadic Bedouin tribesmen who populate the Sinai
Peninsula, most experts say international jihadists likely played a
role. The blasts killed 21 people, most of them Muslims.

"It's hard to think that a homegrown group of Bedouins could
have, on its own, operated such complex and synchronized bombings,"
even with know-how gathered on the Internet, Binnie said.

"The level of organization these attacks" demonstrated several
al-Qaida trademarks, Roberts said.

Since November's attacks on a Jordanian hotel that killed more than
60, al-Qaida has increasingly been criticized for killing civilians. And
when bin Laden issued an audiotape earlier this month, many observers
said his new call to support Palestinians against "Zionists" and
"crusaders" was a move to boost declining popularity in the
Muslim world.









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